My son took a couple pictures today of me smoothing a cut face on the concrete blocks of the stand.
Cutting and fitting are very important to most people making ovens, and I found that cutting firebricks with a chisel yields a fairly smooth surface.
To get the brick to fit more as planned, one needs to take off the high spots.
I used a couple techniques that were pretty 'caveman' ( as my children say) but got the job done with no electricity on site. Either rub the cut edge against the block of the base, or if there is alot to remove, just use a 16 penny nail as a 'point' chisel, and remove material that way first.
Cutting at an angle ( even a compound angle) is not that difficult. Smoothing out the cut sides, goes pretty fast just rubbing against the blocks...The difficult part is transferring the dimensions from the oven to the stone.
Anyway, this may not be a full fledged 'Technique', but I think it is a handy complement to the notion of making the entire oven with no power tools.
Lars.
Cutting and fitting are very important to most people making ovens, and I found that cutting firebricks with a chisel yields a fairly smooth surface.
To get the brick to fit more as planned, one needs to take off the high spots.
I used a couple techniques that were pretty 'caveman' ( as my children say) but got the job done with no electricity on site. Either rub the cut edge against the block of the base, or if there is alot to remove, just use a 16 penny nail as a 'point' chisel, and remove material that way first.
Cutting at an angle ( even a compound angle) is not that difficult. Smoothing out the cut sides, goes pretty fast just rubbing against the blocks...The difficult part is transferring the dimensions from the oven to the stone.
Anyway, this may not be a full fledged 'Technique', but I think it is a handy complement to the notion of making the entire oven with no power tools.
Lars.
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